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[casi] Hiding behind the weapons



http://www.spiked-online.com/Articles/00000006DDD3.htm

3 June 2003

 Hiding behind the weapons

by Brendan O'Neill

Lambasting President Bush and Prime Minister Blair for lying about Iraq's
weapons of mass destruction has become the anti-war lobby's weapon of
choice. For the coalition's critics, the failure to find Saddam's alleged
stockpile raises questions about the legitimacy of the war - a war that was
justified as an attempt to 'disarm Saddam' of his 'weapons of mass murder'.


In the UK, over 50 Labour MPs have signed a Commons motion demanding an
inquiry into the events and evidence leading up to the war. One American
journalist wonders why President Bush hasn't been impeached for telling lies
about WMD (1). According to Salon, 'From Australia to Denmark to Ireland to
the UK, opponents of the war are using [the coalition's] remarks about WMD
as evidence of duplicity by the Bush administration' (2).


It is true that Bush and Blair said their war was about getting rid of
Saddam's WMD - and it's true that no WMD have been found, despite extensive
searches in postwar Iraq. Yet there is a problem with the critics' all-out
focus on the weapons issue. Challenging Bush and Blair's disastrous war in
Iraq by flagging up their dodgy evidence on weapons points to a certain lack
of principle on the part of the anti-war lobby.


Only the truly naive could be shocked that an American president and a
British prime minister made things up in the run-up to war. Western
political leaders have often blown up the facts in order to justify blowing
up countries. From First World War tales about German soldiers roaming the
Belgian countryside raping nuns to Gulf War I stories about Iraqi troops
throwing Kuwaiti babies out of incubators, there has always been a thick
blue line between wartime propaganda and factual evidence.


Consider the Gulf of Tonkin lie that launched the Vietnam War. In August
1964, US forces claimed they had been attacked for a second time by
communists in North Vietnam - a claim that was repeated and reported across
the US media. There had been no second attack; it was a fabrication used to
up the ante in Vietnam (3).


Beyond today's naivety, the anti-war critics' focus on the weapons issue has
become a way of avoiding responsibility for failing to challenge the war in
the first place. Former British Cabinet minister Clare Short says she, and
the rest of Britain, were 'duped' into supporting the invasion by Bush and
Blair's lies about Saddam's weapons (4). Jane Harman, a Democrat
congresswoman from Los Angeles, claims that she was hoodwinked by Bush's
WMD-talk.


'Duped' into supporting the war? These half-cocked claims might be
half-believable if Bush and Blair's evidence had been authoritative or
convincing. It was neither. Questions were raised about the reliability of
the weapons evidence months before the war started.


Opposition politicians' retrospective focus on the apparently all-powerful
evidence is a cover for their own cowardice over Iraq. Clare Short supported
the invasion: after very publicly, and self-obsessively, mulling over the
issue, she voted for war in the House of Commons. Jane Harman, too, voted
for the Bush administration's war resolution in the House of Representatives
in October 2002 - along with a majority of her fellow Democrats.


  Much of the opposition to the war was based on tactics rather than
principle

Yet now Short, Harman and a host of others are blaming the coalition's
weapons evidence - the weak, regurgitated weapons evidence - for making them
support the war. As postwar Iraq spins further out of control, some of the
coalition's critics are trying to wash their hands of responsibility by
pinning the blame on The Evidence. This looks like a continuation of the
anti-war sentiment 'Not in my name' - where protesting against the invasion
of Iraq seemed to be more about opting out and salving one's own conscience,
than about standing up to Western intervention.


Ask yourself this: why does so much of the anti-coalition ire focus on Bush
and Blair's pre-war claims about weapons, rather than on their current
occupation of Iraq and the bogus claims of 'liberation'? Because the
coalition's critics support the continuing intervention in Iraq. As Tom
Baldwin writes in today's Times (London), Clare Short, currently kicking up
a stink about Blair's weapons evidence, did not eventually resign from the
Cabinet because of 'the failure to unearth weapons', but because 'promises
had been broken about the role of the UN in the post-Saddam regime' (5).


In the run-up to the war, the coalition's critics hid behind the UN weapons
inspectors, as a way of calling for a UN-led intervention in Iraq rather
than a US-led invasion. Now that the war is over, they continue to focus on
the weapons claims, while failing effectively to challenge what is going on
in Iraq.


The weapons evidence has become a big bone of contention between the pro-
and anti-war lobbies because, on the fundamentals of Western intervention,
there is little disagreement. The coalition's critics may be anti-bombing,
but they support the West's right to intervene in Iraq and to determine what
should happen there. They would simply prefer an intervention conducted by
the UN, rather than by America; by the Swedish businessman that no one ever
voted for, Hans Blix, rather than by old-style Texan George Bush.


The peace movement prefers Western intervention that is more diplomacy and
humanitarianism than shock and awe - even though such intervention can be as
divisive and degrading for those on the receiving end. The squabbling over
the weapons evidence shows that much of the opposition to the war was based
on tactics rather than principle.


Focusing on the weapons evidence is a way of attacking the coalition's
underhand tactics without challenging their intervention. According to
recent reports, the transcripts of a private conversation between Colin
Powell and UK foreign secretary Jack Straw, in which both men raise doubts
about the evidence, are being circulated in European government circles. The
UK Guardian says this is 'part of an effort among NATO allies to "rein in
some of the less acceptable policies of the Bush administration"' (6). So
picking holes in the evidence can be a way of mocking the coalition's more
outrageous claims, without raising a peep about their ongoing occupation of
Iraq.


Yes, Bush and Blair lied; yes, they exaggerated the threat of Iraq's alleged
weapons in order to justify their self-serving war. Yet there is also a
streak of dishonesty and cowardice in the coalition critics' obsession with
the weapons issue.


Read on:

spiked-issue: War on Iraq

(1) We used to impeach liars, William Rivers Pitt, truthout, 3 June 2003

(2) Angry allies, Jake Tapper, Salon, 30 May 2003

(3) See 30-Year anniversary: Tonkin Gulf lie launched Vietnam War, Jeff
Cohen and Norman Solomon, Media Beat, 27 July 1994

(4) Blair duped public, British MP claims, Matt Peacock, ABC Online, 2 June
2003

(5) Fighting me, her conscience and her hypocrisy, Tom Baldwin, The Times
(London), 3 June 2003

(6) Transcripts raise alarm across NATO, Dan Plesch and Richard
Norton-Taylor, Guardian, 2 June 2003






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